Autographic film

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Autographic_film

Autografický systém pro svitkový film umožňoval fotografovi zaznamenat přímo na negativ písemné informace o pořizovaném snímku v době expozice. Začala jej vyrábět firma Kodak v roce 1914. rdf:langString
The autographic system for roll film was launched by Kodak in 1914, and allowed the photographer to add written information on the film at the time of exposure. The system was patented by Henry Jacques Gaisman, inventor and safety razor manufacturer. George Eastman purchased the rights for US$300,000. It consisted of a tissue-like carbon paper sandwiched between the film and the paper backing. Text was entered using a metal stylus, and would appear in the margin of the processed print. The system was common on early consumer cameras but became unpopular in the 1920s, and was discontinued in 1932. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Autografický film
rdf:langString Autographic film
xsd:integer 197418
xsd:integer 1097410857
rdf:langString Autografický systém pro svitkový film umožňoval fotografovi zaznamenat přímo na negativ písemné informace o pořizovaném snímku v době expozice. Začala jej vyrábět firma Kodak v roce 1914.
rdf:langString The autographic system for roll film was launched by Kodak in 1914, and allowed the photographer to add written information on the film at the time of exposure. The system was patented by Henry Jacques Gaisman, inventor and safety razor manufacturer. George Eastman purchased the rights for US$300,000. It consisted of a tissue-like carbon paper sandwiched between the film and the paper backing. Text was entered using a metal stylus, and would appear in the margin of the processed print. The system was common on early consumer cameras but became unpopular in the 1920s, and was discontinued in 1932. Kodak's autographic films had "A" as the first part of the film size designation. Thus, standard 122 film would be labeled "122" and autographic 122 would be "A122". Autographic roll film sizes were A116, A118, A120, A122, A123, A126, A127, and A130. The autographic feature was marketed as having no extra charge. In 1915, Kodak also sold upgrade autographic backs for their existing cameras.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3135

data from the linked data cloud